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pannes

n. (plural of panne English)

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Pannes

Pannes may refer to the following places in France:

  • Pannes, Loiret, a commune in the Loiret department
  • Pannes, Meurthe-et-Moselle, a commune in the Meurthe-et-Moselle department

Usage examples of "pannes".

But when he hesitantly mentioned how Dion had seemed to develop such an instant yen for Dora Pannes, she whooped knowingly.

Emma Pannes wasn’t an unpleasant-looking woman, but she certainly didn’t possess Lea’s svelte figure.

If one of the most risky parts of the mission had been the extrication of John and Emma Pannes from the city, then successfully obtaining their vocal patterns had been one of the most delicate.

Artifacts Division had done their usual thorough job of researching contemporary fashions and tailoring authentic replicas, but he hoped that this style was close to what Emma Pannes had worn when she and her husband had left the Frankfurter Hof earlier this evening.

Since John Pannes worked for the same company, they knew each other as business associates.

If it involved Hamburg American Lines, then John Pannes would have probably been privy to it.

Somehow, in those intangible, almost telepathic ways a good journalist develops over years of experience, Shirer knew that John Pannes was lying.

John Pannes was the passenger manager for Hamburg-American German Lloyd Lines, the company that was the American representative for the Zeppelin airship fleet.

Emma Pannes, fifteen years younger than her husband, was originally from Illinois.

Franc hoped that the real John Pannes wouldn’t object too strongly to being kidnapped.

The original John Pannes died because he left the promenade just before the crash to see about Emma, who had remained in their cabin for unknown reasons.

History hadn’t recorded the exact reasons why the Pannes had died, but he and Lea wouldn’t make the same fatal error.

He gazed fearfully at Lucky, as if the green cat had turned into a devil, and saw Dora Pannes coolly stooping to grab him.

Oh, he could tell himself there was no reason to give a second thought to an ordinary pretty woman when he’d just met such a wickedly desirable girl as Mitzie Romadka and seen such a beauty as Dora Pannes, not to mention sharing the society of such grotesque but attractive characters as Juno Jones and Mary Akeley.

In a few sentences Phil sketched how he’d found Lucky at Fun Incorporated, lost him again, then caught up with him at the Humberford Foundation just before Dora Pannes grabbed him.